PIGEONS' AILMENTS 91 



cure. It will get more fresh air, and a great deal more exercise, 

 and more sun, than it would get if lett in company with the 

 other birds. In about a week you will notice that it will hold 

 its bill tighter, and if there is a sore on the outside of the bill 

 you will see this sore dry up. In two weeks the chances are 

 that the yellowish deposit on the interior of the mouth will 

 be entirely gone. The pigeon will hover around the other 

 pigeons. It will fly to the outside of the netting and look at 

 its fellows. Place a dish on the ground now and then with a 

 little feed and you will attract it. Catch it when you have a 

 favorable opportunity either with a net on the end of a pole, 

 or with a broom, pinning it into a corner. You may have to 

 try several times, but you will get it after a while. Its eye 

 will be brighter and signs of disease will be gone, and you can 

 put it back into the squab house with the others. The exer- 

 cise, sunlight, change of food, and scanty food, have made 

 the cure. There are few pigeons so bad with canker that they 

 cannot be cured in this way. For that reason we have not 

 much hesitation in saying that canker is a captivity disease, 

 caused by lack of exercise as well as unavoidable filth and too 

 much of the wrong kind of feed. We have observed wild 

 pigeons in the streets and we never saw a case of canker among 

 them. You may say to yourself that it is quite a risk to 

 throw out into the open air a pigeon which has cost you from 

 seventy -five cents to a dollar, but it is better to do this than 

 to take the advice of all other breeders and books and kill it. 



If you do not wish to throw a sick pigeon out into the air 

 to get well, construct a box with wire netting over the front, 

 and put the pigeon in there for special feeding and watering 

 until it gets well. 



Powdered alum sprinkled in the drinking water now and 

 then will tend to ward off canker from a flock. 



It does not pay to dose sick pigeons, because a cure seldom 

 is obtained by dosing, and you are out your time. 



The squab breeder who follows the advice as to feed and 

 water, and cleanliness of squab house, given in this Manual, 

 will not have any sick pigeons. It is so very easy to keep a 

 pigeon in perfect health that the fear of disease is a bugbear 

 not worth taking into account. The element of disease is a 

 constant source of worry to the chicken breeder, and a source 

 of heavy loss to the best of them. We wish to assure all who 



